Dr. Richard Nordquist is professor emeritus of rhetoric and English at Georgia Southern University and the author of several university-level grammar and composition textbooks.
Updated on February 05, 2020An adverb clause (also known as an adverbial clause) is a dependent clause used as an adverb within a sentence. These types of clauses can modify the whole sentence, as well as verbs, adverbs, and adjectives, and may show aspects such as time, reason, concession, or condition. These clauses often start with words such as (while, if, because, when, although, unless, since, so that, whereas, even if, in case, as long as) and other words.
In contrast, an adjectival clause will modify a noun and start with a relative pronoun (that, who, whose, whom, or which) or a subordinate conjunction (when and where).
Before doing these exercises, you may find it helpful to review the study sheet "Building Sentences With Adverb Clauses."
Each of these proverbial sayings contains an adverb clause. Identify the adverb clause in each sentence, and then compare your answers with those below.
In the following sentences, the adverb clauses are in bold print. Examine what word or phrase they're modifying and what aspect they show (time, reason, concession, or condition). For example, in sentence 1, the clause refers to the time that the mice will play.
Nordquist, Richard. "These Exercises Can Help You Identify Adverb Clauses." ThoughtCo, Dec. 1, 2022, thoughtco.com/exercise-in-identifying-adverb-clauses-1692212. Nordquist, Richard. (2022, December 1). These Exercises Can Help You Identify Adverb Clauses. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/exercise-in-identifying-adverb-clauses-1692212 Nordquist, Richard. "These Exercises Can Help You Identify Adverb Clauses." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/exercise-in-identifying-adverb-clauses-1692212 (accessed September 4, 2024).
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